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Imagineering Atlanta - The Politics of Place in the City of Dreams (Paperback)
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Imagineering Atlanta - The Politics of Place in the City of Dreams (Paperback)
Series: Haymarket
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In the age of decentralization, instant communications, and the
subordination of locality to the demands of a globalizing market,
contemporary cities have taken on place-less or a-geographic
characters. They have become phantasmagorical landscapes. Atlanta,
argues Charles Rutheiser, is in many ways paradigmatic of this
generic urbanism. As such, it provides a fertile ground for
investigating the play of culture, power and place within a
"non-place urban realm." Rutheiser uses the mobilization for the
1996 Olympics to talk about the uneven development of Atlanta's
landscape. Like other cities lacking any natural advantages,
Atlanta's reputation and built form have been regularly
reconfigured by generations of entrepreneurs, politicians,
journalists and assorted visionaries to create a service-oriented
information city of global reach. Borrowing a term from Walt
Disney, Rutheiser refers to these successive waves of organized and
systematic promotion as linked, but not always well-co-ordinated
acts of urban "imagineering." Focusing on the historic core of the
metropolitan area, Rutheiser shows how Atlanta has long been both a
test bed for federal urban renewal and a playground for private
capital. The city provides an object lesson in internal
colonization and urban underdevelopment. Yet, however illustrative
of general trends, Atlanta also represents a unique conjunction of
universals and particulars; it exemplifies a reality quite unlike
either New York or Los Angeles-two cities to which it has often
been compared. This book thus adds an important case study to the
emerging discourse on contemporary urbanism. It goes beyond
providing another account of uneven development and the
"theme-parking" of a North American city: Rutheiser reflects on how
contemporary American society thinks about cities, and argues that,
ultimately, despite the ever-increasing virtualization of
day-to-day life, the obliteration of locality is never complete.
There always remains some "here," if only deep beneath the "urbane
disguises," in the interstices of social activity, in the
contradictions of experience and in the residues of individual and
collective memory.
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